Three Nonfiction Books Fantasy Writers Should Read

  1. The Time Traveler’s Guide to Medieval England

I love reading about Medieval history, so when I found this book on audible, I was very interested. The book isn't a novel, so much as a popular history based on what it would be like to travel through England between the years of 1300 and 1400 AD. What would you see, smell, and hear? Who would you meet? What would it be like to live there? It's a fascinating concept, one that treats the past more like a living, breathing place than a remote, long dead era.

The author, Ian Mortimer, makes some starling observations. For example, how young everyone is. Because so many people don't live to old age, nearly everyone is under the age of twenty five. At 16, a boy is considered a grown man, one who can lead troops into battle or become a king in his own right. The youthful society goes a long way towards explaining the lack of education and the sometimes fanciful beliefs many people have. Likewise, the catastrophic effects of the Black Death are hard for modern people to comprehend. By the end of the 14th century, England has half the population it had in the beginning. The population didn't recover until the 1600s. Entire villages would be wiped out, so that walking around the countryside might be like being the survivor of a zombie apocalypse (especially since contracting the plague likely meant certain death).


The author also rightly points out that while they may not have bathed as often as modern people, people in the 14th century made an effort to keep clean, despite our beliefs to the contrary. Cleanliness was a sign of good manners, and so prized that people in particularly filthy occupations bathed every day, and soap was a valued commodity. Almost everyone would have washed their faces and hands every morning, and manners required you to wash your hands before every meal. It's true they might not have been clean by modern standards, that doesn't mean they didn't value cleanliness and try to achieve it.

While this book does have a few slow chapters--I found the section on money a bit tedious--overall, it was a fascinating exploration about what it was like to live in a different time. As a writer, I found it an invaluable resource. It gave me great ideas for stories and intriguing details for Medieval settings. I'd recommend it to fantasy/historical fiction writers, as well as anyone interested in Medieval history.

2. The Plantagenets by Dan Jones


I love reading history, and The Plantagenets covers a particularly fascinating and eventful era in English history. It opens with the tragedy of the White Ship, a pivotal moment when the heir to the throne, only legitimate son of Henry I, died in a shipwreck. Without a male heir, Henry I decides to leave the throne to his only remaining legitimate child, the Empress Matilda. From Matilda's line came some of England's best and worst kings (and queens). Kings like Henry II or Edward III are remembered as powerful rulers who dominated their enemies and expanded their territories and influence. Yet, the Plantagenet kings like Edward II, John Lackland (the notorious Prince John of the Robin Hood legends), and Richard II endangered the monarchy and the country with their incompetence, arrogance, and savagery. Their stories are exciting to listen to, and give the listener a great insight into the Medieval world. Although it's a history book, it's almost as exciting as Game of Thrones. All in all, The Plantagenets is an excellent book, and I'd recommend it to anyone interested in history, or any fans of Medieval fantasy.

3. Mindset by Carol Dweck

I've been fascinated by Carol Dweck's research into the psychology of success since I first read about her work in NurtureShock. It reinforced some of what I'd read about in Alfie Kohn's Punished by Rewards, another excellent book that challenges plenty of received wisdom on using praise to control children's behavior. Still I had yet to read Dweck's magnum opus Mindset, so on a trip to the library I decided to reserve a copy. It's been such an amazing and helpful book, I intend to buy a copy to keep around when I have to return it to the library. While I'd previously though of Dweck's research as primarily relating to teaching and parenting, this book goes much deeper into how our mindset effects our relationships, our careers, and our ability to lead a fulfilling life. 

After reading Dweck's book, I started thinking about how our mindset effects writers. Writing carries with it an enormous amount of rejection and criticism, and requires an intense, sustained effort for any amount of success. How many people want to write a novel but never finish even a rough draft? Or more likely, how many have a good story idea but never sit down to write it at all? So what does it take to withstand all this adversity and keep writing? A "growth" mindset.

In her book, Dweck shows that some people embrace challenges as learning opportunities. They see failure and rejection as valuable lessons, and learn to accept feedback without allowing the criticism to sap their self-worth. These people have a growth mindset--they believe they can grow their talents and improve themselves with plenty of hard work and effort. Other people have a fixed mindset--they believe that success is dependent on talent and luck alone. They're reluctant to take risks and hate failure, because it's a sign that they're not talented enough to be successful. The fixed mindset discourages effort, because if you have enough talent, everything should be easy for you. 

It's easy to slip into a fixed mindset when you've gotten another rejection. It's easy to say, "I'm not good enough, I might as well give up." But it's so much more satisfying and exciting to say, I'll try again. I'll write more stories. I'll write another novel. I'll listen to feedback from my writing group, my beta readers, and anyone else who'll give it to me. I've gotten helpful feedback from editors who rejected me, and I'm so glad they took the time to send more than a form letter. A growth mindset encourages me to take risks with my writing. I'll try a different genre, or try writing short stories in addition to working on a novel, or query for non-fiction articles. Quitting guarantees failure, but if we keep going, if we work hard enough, we just might make it. 

My Favorite Literary Cats

I am a huge cat lover. My own two kitties are very sweet and loving, in addition to being adorable.  I also love to read, and I'm often tickled to find that some of my favorite authors write about cats, especially when the cat becomes a fascinating character in its own right.  So here is my list of great feline characters, from very enjoyable books.

1. Webster, from P.G. Wodehouse's Mulliner Nights. 

This book is funny, lighthearted, and pure enjoyment from cover to cover.  But my favorite stories have to be "The Story of Webster" and "Cats will be Cats." In "The Story of Webster," Lancelot Mulliner is a bohemian painter, to the disappointment of his wealthy uncle.  When his uncle is called away to serve as a bishop in West Africa, he sends Lancelot his beloved cat Webster, in the hope that Webster's strict dignity anddecorum will inspire Lancelot to change his ways.  Indeed, Webster is such a well-behaved, dignified cat, and his stern looks are so disapproving, that Lancelot quickly falls under his spell.  But all is not lost--Lancelot only must discover a way to help Webster "unbutton" so he can return to the chaotic life he loves.  But in "Cats will be Cats," Lancelot's uncle has returned to England in some terrible trouble.  All of Lancelot and his uncle's thinking cannot save him, until finally it's the lovable Webster who saves the day

2. Crookshanks, from J.K. Rowling's Harry Potter Books  

I loved reading J.K. Rowling's books, and no list of literary cats would be complete without Crookshanks.  A large, highly intelligent cat, Crookshanks is the only character in the books who immediately recognizes Scabbers as an Animagus.  He is loving and affectionate towards Hermione, who defends him from Ron when he attacks Scabbers, and he is able to sense untrustworthy people. Crookshanks plays a crucial role in protecting Sirius Black in Harry Potter and the Prison of Azkaban, making him a cat hero.  

3. Hobbes, from Bill Watterson's Calvin and Hobbes books 

Calvin and Hobbes are some of my all time favorite comic strips.  Although Hobbes is technically an imaginary tiger, many of his characteristics are clearly inspired by house cats.  After all, what cat owner has never seen their cat lounging in the sun as Hobbes does?  Or has never had a cat spring from nowhere to randomly attack you? But although he's wonderfully playful, Hobbes has a deeper side, engaging with Calvin in philosophical debates, and gently mocking his friend's pretensions (a bit like Webster).  Hobbes' whimsy and his thoughtfulness never conflict; rather, it's as though he has thought deeply and realized that joyfulness and play is the best way to enjoy life.  His thoughtful, self-aware playfulness feels powerfully deep--as though Hobbes has discovered the key to a meaningful but enjoyable life, something the humans in the comic struggle to find in vain.

4. Puss in Boots, from the Mother Goose fairy-tales


Before he was popularized as an adorable swash-buckling hero, the cat from "Puss in Boots" was a trickster who helped his master, a young milliner's son, to marry a princess. Cats are funny creatures, and they certainly can be tricky.  In fact, I've often thought that all the odd occurrences up until the very end of the movie Paranormal Activity could be completely explained by the couple having a cat.  Although some people have criticized this story because it shows the cat getting everything he wants for his master by lying, isn't it more realistic to show that, than to pretend that truthfulness actually helps most people succeed?  Trust me, no one became president by telling the truth all the time.  But in Puss in Boots, the cat's loyalty and cleverness are certainly positive characteristics that my loving kitties share.  

5. All the Cats from T.S. Eliot's Old Possum's Book of Practical Cats  

T.S. Eliot, in addition to being a great poet, was also a huge cat lover.  In fact, he loved cats so much that he wrote an entire book of children's poetry about cats.  Andrew Lloyd Webber loved the poems so much that he wrote a musical based on them, and that is how the musical Cats was born.  The book contains so many lovable cat characters that it's hard to pick a favorite--how to choose between Macavity the Mystery Cat, Magical Mr. Mistoffelees, or the Great Rumpus Cat? The poems are so enjoyable to read that anyone who likes poetry or cats should read them.  And if you like musicals, well...

6. The Cheshire Cat from Lewis Carroll's Alice's Adventures in Wonderland

The Cheshire Cat is mischievous and mysterious, at times philosophical, at times pure anarchy.  If dogs represent the loyal side of human nature, certainly cats like the Cheshire Cat represent the allusive, knowable side of our nature. It's like they are the id of our imagination.   

7. Bill the Cat from Berkeley Breathed’s Bloom County

The only cat to have his brain stolen and replaced by Donald Trump’s after a terrible yachting accident (this is a real series of cartoons, pre-Donald Trump running for president. You should look them up immediately. I’ll wait.). Bill the Cat runs for president many times, dates celebrities, and dies frequently only to be resurrected or cloned in nightmarish scientific experiments. But like all of Bloom County, he’s hilarious!

Go to the Library!

There are plenty of writers who like to write outside the home. Just looking around a Starbucks or a Barnes and Noble or an Independent bookstore/coffee shop (remember those?), you're bound to find at least one person writing/blogging or procrastinating when they'd like to be writing/blogging. Yet, I rarely see studious writing types at the one place that seems perfect for them: the library.

I go to the library regularly because I have young children, and libraries are awesome places that have story-time, indoor children's areas, and shelf after shelf of relatively sturdy board books. But after my children get a chance to play with books and puzzles and things, I take a few moments to check out the main part of the library. It's wonderful. There are tons of books, CDs, audiobooks, and plenty of quiet spaces to read or write. And unlike bookstores, all these things are FREE to check out.

What's more, the selection of books and audiobooks at the library is often more diverse than you find in bookstores. For example, while bookstores focus on newly-released and popular books, libraries often have older books that you rarely find in brick and mortar stores nowadays, though they might be available on Amazon. Our local library has an excellent collection of audiobooks as well, with far more selection than I've ever seen in a store. The largest public library near me even has its own adjoining coffee shop!

Most libraries have computers available which you can use to write on if you don't want to haul around your laptop, and WiFi if you prefer using your own computer. They have printers you can use for a small fee, which is a lifesaver to those of us with cranky printers we forever forget to fill with ink.

Since I've started going to the library regularly, I find myself reading more, and choosing "riskier" books or CDs, instead sticking with what's familiar. I think that helps to broaden my reading habits and improves my writing. And if you're like me, being around tons of books has a soothing, calming magic that's all its own. The library feels like a sanctuary--a quiet, gentle space that's welcoming to everyone, no matter what your financial situation. So like Hermione, go to the library!

An Endless Bookshelf

I love books. I probably love them a little too much, because there’s so many in my home that Marie Kondo would have to devote a very special episode to sorting through them with me. Just kidding! I’d never let her near my books. Seriously, if she showed up at my door I’d drive her away with the power of salt and burning sage. I love books!

I may not ever read through all the books I own (though I’ve read most of them, and I certainly intend to try). But I love having enough books that I will always have one available to read or reread, and enough variety to suit my mood at any given moment. I particularly love science fiction and fantasy, but at any given time I’m also drawn to literary classics, nonfiction books about history, science, politics, and folklore, and even occasional thrillers. As a parent and a teacher, I also read lots of picture books, middle grade, and young adult fiction.    

My bookshelf seems even more endless when I consider the different formats of books that I enjoy. I love traditional reading, but I love listening to audiobooks on my commute or other long drives, and while I primarily like physical books, I also get eBooks from time to time. I’ve discovered many comic books and graphic novels I love as well.

Given my love of books, perhaps it was inevitable that I’d try to write a few. I started out writing short readers’ theater plays for my 8th grade students to read out loud in class (a great way to encourage them to read and develop their fluency, and an eye-opening exposure to very ruthless and honest critiques for me). Then I wrote my first novel, tried to pitch it, and went...nowhere. But I didn’t give up. I went on to write a ton of short stories, and I started having much more success and interest in those. After a while, I decided to compile my science fiction stories into a book, which become Sapience.

I’m continuing to read and write as much as I can, and my next book, Saints and Curses, should be available later this spring. My current work in progress is a middle grade science fiction/fantasy novel that I’m very excited about. I hope to finish a first draft by the end of the summer. In the meantime, I’m hoping to focus this blog on the books that I’ve discovered and read, with occasional updates about author events I’m attending and other book stuff. I hope you enjoy reading!